Abdifatah Yusuf Isse put a face on terrorism Thursday.
Testifying in federal court, he described how he and other young men met at a Minneapolis mosque in 2007 and hatched a plan to return to their native Somalia and join a holy war.
The 28-year-old, the first of the men to publicly discuss their journey, strode confidently into court dressed in a dark blazer, off-white shirt and gold tie. He responded calmly to questions from Assistant U.S. Attorney John Docherty.
His path to the witness stand began in 2007 when he came to Minnesota, hoping to get married. Instead he became embroiled in a secret pipeline of Minnesota men planning to take up arms for Al-Shabab, a U.S.-designated terrorist group.
"I have decided to go to Somalia and wage jihad against Ethiopians," Isse said he told his girlfriend before leaving.
Isse said the men took great pains to keep their plans secret. Docherty asked why.
"Actually, it wasn't supported by the community," he said. "We were afraid we might get caught by the government or get in trouble with the mosque officials, or the parents."
Defense attorneys will get a chance to question Isse on Friday and are expected to contend that he is only talking now because he has cut a deal and hopes to get a reduced sentence by cooperating with the government in the trial of their client, Mahamud Said Omar, 46, of Minneapolis. Omar faces five charges related to helping a terrorist organization and conspiring to kill and maim people overseas.